In 1980, Kikuchi released her debut studio album, Don't Be Stupid,[1] through the Teichiku Records sublabel Continental. The following year, she arranged the tracks for the 1981 album Cool "C" by American musician Richie Cole. Her next albums, Flashing (1981),[3]All Right (1982), Woman (1983), and Reverse It (1984),[1] were all issued by Continental. Kikuchi's 1987 album Flying Beagle and 1988 album Sevilla Breeze were released by CBS/Sony Records.[1] Kikuchi composed the music for the 1993 film Yakuza Ladies Revisited 2; her album Beam, released through RCA Records, serves as the film's soundtrack.[1]
In 2002, Kikuchi served as music director and led an orchestra at the 17th National Cultural Festival, held in Tottori Prefecture, performing the song "Furusato - Home in My Soul".[1] In 2005, she performed the song once more at the opening ceremony of the 17th National Lifelong Learning Festival, held in the same prefecture.[1] That same year, she received the 30th Tottori City Cultural Award.[1]
Personal life
Kikuchi is married to guitarist Masatsugu Matsumoto.[1] She moved to Tottori with him in 1999.[1]
Discography
All albums released under the Continental label were released to streaming services including Spotify and YouTube Music[4] on May 28, 2024, with the albums released under the CBS/Sony Records label following[5] on October 8, 2024.
Himiko Kikuchi Big Band - Himiko Kikuchi Big Band Live (Flying Beagle Corporation, 2000)
『ふるさと』Home In My Soul (Flying Beagle Corporation, 2005)
Himiko Kikuchi Double Quartet - DQ * The Live! (Toei Music Publishing and Flying Beagle Corporation, 2007)
References
^ abcdefghijklmno"菊池ひみこ プロフィール" [Profile of Himiko Kikuchi]. FlyingBeagle.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved August 30, 2022.
^Liner notes for Montreux Cyclone (1979) by Bingo Miki & the Inner Galaxy Orchestra. "On the evening of July 11, 1979, Bongo Miki and his twenty-five piece Inner Galaxy Orchestra made a historic debut in the western world of jazz at the huge Casino Hall in Montreux, Switzerland as part of "Japan Today" concert during the 1979 Montreux Jazz Festival. [...] Himiko Kikuchi: keyboards [...]"
^"Reviews". Saxophone Journal. Vol. 9. 1982. pp. 45–46.